Named one of the Ten Best Books of 2014 by the New York Times Book Review and New York Magazine "Gorgeously tender at its core…beautiful, heartstopping… Family Life really blazes." ―Sonali Deraniyagala, New York Times Book Review Known for his "cunning, dismaying and beautifully conceived" fiction ( New York Times ), Akhil Sharma delivers a story of astonishing intensity and emotional precision. Growing up in Delhi in 1978, eight-year-old Ajay Mishra and his older brother Birju play cricket on the streets, eagerly waiting for the day they can join their father in America. America to the Mishras is, indeed, everything they could have imagined and more―until tragedy strikes. Young Ajay prays to a God he envisions as Superman, searching for direction amid the ruins of his family's new life. Heart-wrenching and darkly funny, Family Life is a universal story of a boy torn between duty and his own survival. *Starred Review* If the first rule of strong writing is, show, don’t tell (and it is), Sharma is a grand master, a black belt, an Olympic champion. Via the spare, guileless voice of protagonist Ajay Mishra, we travel the entire 7,000-mile journey from New Delhi to New York in his shoes as his family—father, mother, brother Birju, and he—arrives and settles in America. There is the joyous, even hopeful dispensing of household goods and favorite toys that can’t make the plane trip. The surprised delight of reading the exotic ingredients on the labels of canned goods in American supermarkets. The breathless anticipation of Birju’s acceptance into a prestigious prep school. Then, after Birju suffers a tragic accident, the suctioning from their lives of all that hope, joy, delight, and anticipation. This is not just the double-whammy smack of reality á la strangers in a strange land. It is a multiple-whammy, full-body smackdown that ramps up the bizarreness of their new world by adding tragic, harrowing circumstances. As extreme as the family’s misfortunes become, Sharma’s seemingly effortless prose transcends any disbelief, and his characters and their experiences will linger in the mind’s recesses long after the last page is read. --Donna Chavez "Deeply unnerving and gorgeously tender." ― New York Times Book Review "There's nothing like the pleasure of being devastated by a short novel. Like Jhumpa Lahiri, Akhil Sharma writes of the Indian immigrant experience with great empathy and a complete lack of sentimentality. Family Life is a dark and thrilling accomplishment by a wildly gifted writer." ― Ann Packer " Family Life will cut your heart to pieces but it will also make you rejoice. The language, the humor, the sophistication, the empathy, the insight―all signal a new kind of literature about families and the bonds with which they hold us tight." ― Gary Shteyngart "Bracingly vivid… Has the ring of all devastatingly good writing: truth." ― Molly Langmuir, Elle " Family Life is a terse, devastating account of growing up as a brilliant outsider in American culture. It is a nearly perfect novel." ― Edmund White "Sharma is a rare master at charting the frailties and failures, the cruelties and rages, the altering moods and contradictions, whims and perversities of a tragic cast of characters. But this most unsentimental writer leaves the reader, finally and surprisingly, moved." ― Kiran Desai "An immigrant story like no other: funny and dark, unrelenting and above all, true." ― Nell Freudenberger "A loving portrait, both painful and honest." ― Publishers Weekly, Starred Review "[F]ine and memorable." ― Meg Wolitzer, NPR "If you're the betting type, put money on it: National Book Award, Pulitzer, and the Book Critic Circle-thingy. Akhil's in the running for a hat trick." ― Amie Barrodale, Vice "A heartbreaking novel-from-life… [Sharma] takes after Hemingway, as each word of his brilliant novel feels deliberate, and each line is quietly moving." ― Maddie Crum, Huffington Post "Sharma spent 13 years writing this slim novel, and the effort shows in each lucid sentence and heartbreaking detail." ― Stephen Lee, Entertainment Weekly "An unsentimental, powerful portrait of immigrant life from an author who has been compared to Dostoyevsky." ― Angela Carone, San Diego Magazine "Surface simplicity and detachment are the hallmarks of this novel, but hidden within its small, unembellished container are great torrents of pity and grief. Sedulously scaled and crafted, it transforms the chaos of trauma into a glowing work of art." ― The Wall Street Journal "Dark humor twines through Sharma’s unforgettable story of survival and its costs." ― Mary Pols, People "I lost all track of time while I was reading it, and felt by the end that I’d returned from a great and often harrowing journey… To my own surprise, I found myself renewed after reading it, and imbued with a feeling of hope." ― John Wray, Salon "With his subtly drawn point of view―recreating